ABOUT THIS ALBUM

Album Notes

Hank Grant, born Feb. 22, 1971, was the youngest of three with two older sisters (Theresa and Tabatha).

When Hank was twelve, his mother bought an organ for the family home. Her love of music and family, brought hours and love, entertainment and family together. Singing and playing in the evenings after dinner...or just gathering in the family room on a weekend afternoon to reminisce and harmonize at the request of anyone in the family. A prodigy was in the making.

It wasn't long until he was playing standard holiday songs for the family, and even in the family Church. He was even honored when asked by his sister to play the wedding march in her wedding.

Hank attended RedRock Public Schools (RedRock, OK) from the second grade until he graduated in 1989. Throughout junior high school he developed a close relationship with his FFA advisor, Mr. Phillip Fuss, (and former Music Instructor as well). Fuss heard Hank sing and decided that he would mentor him and entered him in many public speaking events, all the time envisioning Hank on a stage in front of hundreds or thousands of fans.

Mr. Fuss took Hank to a music store and asked him to pick out a musical track. Hank picked "Smokey Mountain Rain", by Ronnie Milsap. Mr. Fuss said, "Well, you need to start practicing, because you are going to perform it live, in front of an audience." And he did.

His first performance was in front of his junior high school classmates and faculty, and admittedly, he was "so scared". However, his performance went so well that he was, in his own words, "addicted".

He began performing at all kinds of school activities such as basketball games, football games, and other events, while taking the most pride in being asked to sing the National Anthem.

It was during this time that he began entering local vocal contests, where he soon earned statewide recognition for his performance of "God Bless the U.S.A.", by Lee Greenwood.

Hank's senior year, he enlisted in the Oklahoma Army National Guard. The same year, his mother and stepfather divorced. Marsha moved she and the family to Billings, Oklahoma.

Hank, while finishing his senior year in high school, soon found himself leaving home for camp in the National Guard at Fort Benning, GA. Graduating, it was the first time he and his mother had been apart in their lives, but each knew that their faith in family and the love of God, would prevail. And it did.

Hank's mom and stepfather (Pemberton), found themselves purchasing the bar in which they had met. It was named Doolie's Bar and Grill. Soon thereafter, they decided to buy Hank a karaoke machine, and sound equipment and began booking him to sing in the bar as a one man show.

Hank joined up with Donnie McKeown who played guitar and took a liking to Hank. With McKeown's help, Hank formed a band in 1992 called Wild West. They found themselves being invited to gigs all over Oklahoma.

Outside of his band engagements, Hank entered and won many talent contests. Life and music, were good. He moved to Nashville in 1994 so he could pursue his music career.

After an emotional and trying year, and with, in Hank's words, "all of the slamming doors in Nashville", he moved back to Oklahoma in 1996.

He, again, went back to the one-man show at his mother's bar.

That year, with the fire and hunger in his veins and soul to sing and perform, Hank entered the Jimmy Dean Country Showdown, and won, advancing to the state level of competition, where he was ultimately eliminated.

Frustrated, he searched. For identity and purpose.

In 1997, he decided to pursue his second passion, law enforcement. Putting his music on hold somewhat, Hank found himself sworn in as a police officer in the City of Lahoma, (OK).

Prospering in job and family, it was 1999 that things began to rapidly happen, yet once again. He saw his second marriage dissolve, but also found himself as a single parent having sole custody of his two elder sons, Andrew and Brady, from the previous marriage.

An officer until the year 2005, Hank's life, again, began to become riddled with challenges. He lost his life-long friend Charles Fink, to suicide, only to be followed by his mother's passing away just two months later.

The positive? While working as a police officer in Hennessey, Hank met songwriter, Bill Hail. With Hail mentoring Hank in the ability to song write, the two soon found themselves teamed up with Hail's friend, and fellow co-writer, Dave Younger.

Leaving law enforcement, Hank set out on a new beginning. Aimlessly somewhat, but providing for his children, and searching for the will in which God, and his mother, had blessed him.

He began welding in the oil fields of Texas and Oklahoma, perhaps refining a new trade that would provide him a bus ticket to his new destiny and home.

Now a single parent, with nothing to lose, it was 1995 when Nashville called his name, once again. He made the journey to the city and established his own welding business as backup and income.

With an army of songs that he, Hail and Younger had written, he teamed up with other great songwriters in Nashville such as Craig Wiseman, Hank Cochran, Mark Dreyer, Jerry Earl Laseter, Timothy Don Johnson, and James Dean Hicks. With Hail willing to invest, Hank went into the studio to record his first album "Bible and a Bus Ticket Home", produced by Dreyer and Hail.

With the new album at hand, Hank finds himself performing locally around the Nashville country music scene. He has teamed up with his best friend, become manager, Monty Bailey (mbentertainment), an endeavor that Bailey considers, "an honor".

"The first time I heard this guy sing was a little over two years ago, and I think he had barely hit town at the time", said Bailey. By the time he sang the second verse of his song I was hooked!" (laughs). "He walked off the stage and I said, I gotta meet this guy." The rest is history.

It's no secret that Hank and his mother, Marsha, had a very close relationship. Mother and son. Best friends. As he performs his title cut, "Bible and a Bus Ticket Home", there is certainly reminiscence of the first day he left home in RedRock, Oklahoma and all that is beheld since that day.

ank Grant has done a fine job, the title track was a Collin Raye´s hit in the nineties here there is an excellent version of this song, other great themes are What I Wouldn´t Give and Hank Cochran´s I´m Only Half The Answer, good combination of Traditional Country and Honky Tonk Music.-

Session Expiration Warning

Session Expiration

We need to talk.

The web browser you're using to surf the web is so old it’s embarrassing. But hey, we hope you consider us a friend, the kind of friend you can count on to tell you when there's spinach stuck between your teeth. So here it goes: every time you surf the web with that antiquated web browser it’s like you have spinach in your teeth. Every time you get online, spinach!

Look, we don't want you to be the butt of any more jokes when the sites you visit don't load or function properly. So please - for your own sake - click on one of the links for your preferred browser below, and get that spinach out of your teeth for good.